View clinical trials related to Bulimia.
Filter by:Body dissatisfaction is most common among girls in their teenage years and young adulthood, this is also around the time where the risk of developing binge eating disorder is the highest. Black/African American girls are more likely to engage in binge eating behaviors compared to their White American counterparts; however, they receive less help for eating issues. Further, increase rates of obesity in the Black/African American population may indicate that binge eating may be a bigger problem for this population than discussed. Therefore, the primary purpose of this randomized controlled pilot is to assess the feasibility of this pilot study to be used in a large scale fully-powered study. The secondary purpose of this study is to assess if two different nutrition and body image programs elicit positive outcomes among Black/African American teenage girls who indicate a desire to improve body image.
This is a mixed method feasibility randomized controlled trial to explore the feasibility and acceptability of therapist delivered, culturally adapted, manualized Ca-GBBB intervention for Eating Disorders (EDs) - Bulimia Nervosa (BN) and Bing Eating Disorder (BED) in Pakistan.
Binge eating disorder (BED) is one of the recently acknowledged eating disorders, with many theories underlying its pathology whether biological or psychological. From the biological perspective, changes in plasma ghrelin were hypothesized to have a major role in developing and maintaining the disorder, while from the psychopathological perspectives, abnormalities in emotion regulation were found in many patients. Since Dialectical Behavioral Therapy (DBT) is known to target emotion dysregulation, the main aim of this study is to assess the efficacy of DBT versus treatment as usual (TAU) in BED patients, and whether plasma ghrelin level will be affected after treatment in both arms.
To better understand the potential benefits of psychedelics in overeating disorders, Tryp Therapeutics will conduct a safety and feasibility clinical trial using TRP 8802 among individuals with Binge Eating Disorder. This is a single-center phase 2a open-label study to assess the safety and feasibility of a single dose of TRP 8802 in subjects with BED. Subjects will undergo screening, preparation therapy sessions, dosing, integration therapy sessions, and follow-up for 12 weeks following the dose of TRP 8802. The total participation in the study will be up to approximately 5 months.
The current study will use a full factorial design to identify the independent and combined effects of four core MABT components when combined with standard behavioral treatment for BN and BED. The primary aim of the study will be to evaluate the independent efficacy of Mindful Awareness, Distress Tolerance, Emotion Modulation, and Values-Based Decision Making on eating pathology (at posttreatment and at 6 and 12-month follow-ups). Secondary aims will be (1) to test target engagement of each MABT component, i.e., to confirm that each treatment component impacts both the variable which it targets and self-regulation and that improvements in these are associated with improvements in outcomes and (2) to test the hypotheses that the efficacy of each component is moderated by related baseline deficits in self-regulation (e.g. individuals with worse distress tolerance at baseline are most likely to benefit from conditions that include the Distress Tolerance component). A final exploratory aim will be to quantify the component interaction effects, which may be partially additive (because components overlap and/or there is diminishing return), fully additive, or synergistic (in that components may partially depend on each other).
Binge eating disorder (BED) is a common and disabling eating disorder (ED) which has significant effects on psychological wellbeing, physical health, and quality of life. Talking therapies, most notably cognitive behaviour therapy (CBT), are presently recommended for the treatment of BED. However, outcomes from treatment are inadequate. Therefore, there is a need for development of new treatments. This study aims to investigate the feasibility of combining Attention Bias Modification Training (ABMT) and Transcranial Direct Current Stimulation (tDCS) to reduce binge-eating behaviour and craving for food in people with BED. ABMT is a computerised training that seeks to alter responses towards food that people are not consciously aware of. During ABMT, participants are trained to 'look towards' low-calorie food and 'look away' from high-calorie food. TDCS is a safe, well tolerated, non-invasive form of brain stimulation which is suitable for supervised self-administration. It stimulates specific brain areas using a mild electrical current (2 mA) via small electrodes placed on the scalp. In this study, participants will be randomly allocated to receive either ABMT with real tDCS or ABMT with sham tDCS. ABMT and real/sham tDCS will be delivered simultaneously, i.e. participants will engage in ABM training whilst receiving tDCS. All participants will be remotely supervised by the study researcher for the duration of each treatment session. Biological male and female adults (aged 18-60) of any gender will be eligible to take part if they have a DSM-V of BED and they are overweight or obese. Taking part will involve completing 10 sessions of combined ABMT and real or sham tDCS over 2-3 weeks. Binge frequency, food craving and other outcomes will be measured at the start of the study, end of the study, and at the 6-week follow-up.
Binge eating disorder is the most prevalent eating disorder, with consequences not only economic but also social. It is related to a set of cognitive alterations related to impulsivity, cognitive function, attention, decision making, emotional control and physiological alterations in the Central nervous system (CNS) in the processing of rewards, mainly in the frontal cortical regions. Psychotherapies are the standard reference treatments, with Cognitive Behavioral Therapy (CBT) being the most indicated nonpharmacological intervention. However, the avoidance rates and the rates of non responders to treatment are significant. In view of this, it is believed that therapeutic approaches aimed at the modulation of the CNS, such as Transcranial direct-current stimulation (tDCS) may have a beneficial effect on the neurobiology of the processes that govern these disorders, thus adding to the effects of CBT and amplifying the therapeutic response.
This is a naturalistic study implementing a routine assessment to monitor the evolution of the patients with eating disorders being treated in various centers of "ITA salud mental" in Spain.
Hypothesis: High-frequency rTMS can significantly reduce craving for food in patients with BED just after the stimulation and also over the one month observation period. Method: The study was designed as a randomized double blind and placebo controlled one. The active group was stimulated by high-frequency rTMS, with the following stimulation parameters: frequency 10 Hz, 1500 pulses, 107 s inter-train, 100% minimal motor threshold and 10 stimulation session. The control group was stimulated by a sham rTMS coil. The FCQ-S and the FCQ-T questionnaires were used to evaluate the food craving.
The research proposed here seeks to delineate the outcomes of people who have received treatment for an eating disorder at a specialist eating disorder service in childhood or adolescence (hereafter 'former patients'). This will inform our understanding of the maintenance of treatment effects beyond initial trial follow-ups, and together with data collected during treatment will allow for identification of factors predicting chronicity which will inform further treatment development.